Sunshine Today, Cloudy Tomorrow

Ethan has a remote control toy that talks. “Today’s shape is circle!” it says when he pushes a button, and then quickly launches into a counting song as his baby fingers push two buttons together. Sometimes it spouts out a weather forecast as if he were watching TV: “Sunshine today, cloudy tomorrow!”

The voice for that one is female, squeaky. Overly cheerful, as though clouds tomorrow—the forecast is always the same—were a welcome thing. Although I suppose there’s something to be said for having a heads up that clouds are on the way.

clouds at 3:41 pm as a metaphor for depression3:41 p.m.

My depression has materialized in almost every form possible – anger, anxiety, flat nothingness, extreme sadness that requires a large and close-by stash of Kleenex. Until recently, that sadness was a slow decline, a slipping, a falling in, something I could feel coming. My forecast would show the clouds moving in; it was a reliable source that would allow for some preparation. I would reach out to bat the depression away, then watch it soar like a badminton birdie that flies farther and smoother than its awkward form would suggest.

Earlier this year that changed. I started having what I call “mini crashes” – fine one day, not fine the next. The sunshine would, suddenly and with no warning, be replaced by clouds, and I’d stand there wondering where they came from and why my inner meteorologist had failed me.

clouds at 8:42 pm as a metaphor for depression8:42 p.m.

I had one too many rainy days and had to do something about it. Thankfully, I’ve got it mostly under control now, but I still watch the clouds much more than I did before.

That’s the reality I’m left with, I guess. It’s been five years and the depression—or the possibility of it—isn’t going away. It’s in me. It is me.

It’s taken me a long time to accept that and be willing to deal with it and all its implications.

It’s okay, I guess. It’s manageable. Mostly, as they say, it is what it is. I’m better now, but if I need to I can batten down the hatches, ride out the storm, and wait for the sunshine to filter through again.

It always does.

clouds at 9:13 pm as a metaphor for depression9:13 p.m.

[These pictures were all taken on the same day several weeks ago. The clouds where I live are beautiful – shocking and entrancing and sometimes downright menacing. I take pictures of the skies a lot, but the way the clouds developed on that day happened to be particularly eye-catching.]

 

The Sound of Silence

He is quiet. So quiet that it’s easy to forget he’s there. I did forget once, until I heard a squeak and thought What’s that? and remembered the baby.

I hear footsteps in the hall upstairs. The other one is supposed to be in quiet time, though with him there really is no such thing. He is not quiet. Never has been.

The silence of this new baby is unexpected.

***

We had just come home from the hospital. The baby was quiet. Sleeping. Sitting next to me at the kitchen table, Rich sent the signal across the room and the first notes danced from the speakers.

Hello darkness, my old friend
I’ve come to talk with you again

It’s been on his playlist for a while now but in that moment those notes got caught in my chest.

Because a vision softly creeping
Left its seeds while I was sleeping

The day-two tears rose, pushing past the music and breath and lump in my throat. I didn’t allow them a release.

And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains
Within the sound of silence

No words, no questions, no what ifs. Just a time remembered when things weren’t so silent.

***

This time is different. Of course it is. This is a different baby, something I’m reminded of every time I pull off his little hat to reveal the blond hair underneath. It has a reddish tinge. We don’t know who he looks like.

I am different. I have done this before.

Some of this new-baby stuff has come back to me like the flash of a time-travel machine, leaving me in a time and place that’s disconcertingly the same but not.

Some of this is new. Feeding one while entertaining another. Really tiny clothes. The soreness.

But mostly it’s the silence that’s different.

It won’t always be this way, I know. He won’t always be a textbook eat-poop-sleep baby. Day 13 today, but how long will it last? That question sits with me now, tapping at the window of my silent experience.

He is mine. He feels so very mine, even though I hardly know him at all.

I’m trying to just enjoy the silence.

***

Lyrics: The Sound of Silence by Simon and Garfunkel.

Time Will Tell

Clock from below

Image credit: tamburix on Flickr

My head is not quiet.

Two days ago it was quiet, or relatively so. With three weeks to go before my due date I was living in a surreal space. I know what’s to come (more or less) but I was having a hard time believing it’s coming so soon.

Having a second baby is a weird experience. Before my first was born I was anxious, though just how anxious I didn’t actually realize at the time. I was still lost in that first-time-mom fog of dreaming about sweet babies and sighs and soft blankets. Because you don’t know, do you? You can never really know what it’s like to have a new baby until you get there yourself.

This time I know what it’s like, and yet not really. What will it be like with two? How will I be? Is it going to be okay?For the past several weeks I’ve been more focused on meeting this new little being than I have been about how he’s going to get here and what will happen in the days and weeks and months after. I feel like I know this child already – the one who likes to stick his feet in my ribs, the one who gets hiccups a lot, the one who dances when I eat something sweet, which are all things Connor never really did. I’m trying to picture him – his hair, his cheeks, his fingers. Will he look like his brother? Will he have my eyes?

And then on Saturday night I woke up around midnight having contractions. They were the mild Braxton Hicks type, slow but rhythmic, and unlike anything this mama who’s never laboured before has experienced. I thought, Hi! Are you getting ready to come? and Good. We can do this together.

Then on Sunday morning I got cranky. At first I blamed my efforts to play around with design (never a good thing) and then I retreated upstairs for a bit.

And then I couldn’t breathe.

I’m not ready, I thought. We don’t have the hospital bag packed and the car seat isn’t installed and we haven’t figured out where we’re going to store the receiving blankets. We need to get the windshield replaced. The dog needs to go to the groomer. We need more freezer meals!

The list I had made the night before suddenly seemed overwhelming and despite being organized I felt ill-prepared. I let that feeling of the list, the list drown out the little voice in my head that was telling me that’s not what this is about.

But I don’t want to think about that. 

Like a big girl, I did think about it and realized I was having an anxiety attack. Yes, we have more stuff to do. No, none of it is critical – the hospital bag is half ready and we can chuck the rest in if we need to, and the car seat can be installed quickly. But I’m not ready.

I need to think more about this whole birth process (more on that in another post) and I need to sit with my thoughts for a while. This baby might be as challenging as Connor was. I might not cope this time either. It might be better or worse, happier or harder, but I need to internalize the knowing that ultimately it will be okay.

It will be okay.

So I took a deep breath, let the anxiety in and acknowledged its presence, then watched it leave. I don’t know what the next day will bring, or the next three weeks, or the next three months. Whatever happens will happen, and it will happen on its own schedule.

I’m not ready, but I don’t have to be.

It will be okay.

Loosely based on the current prompt at Just.Be.Enough: “Now what?” We’ve got a giveaway happening with this one – come join us!

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UPDATE: This post is featured on BlogHer Moms today – I’m honoured!

Home Alone: Diary of an Anxious Mama

Rich and Connor were away last week, leaving me home alone for six days. SIX DAYS.

That’s six days of a quiet house all to myself. Six days of my definition of heaven. But it was also six days of anxiety, worrying about them as they drove 1,000 miles there and 1,000 miles back and five nights of talking myself down while listening to every little sound a quiet house makes.

Here’s what it was like.

Day 1

8:30 a.m.: Depart for work, leaving the husband with strict instructions to provide regular updates on their drive so I can avoid picturing them crashing on the highway. Cry.

10 a.m.: Check for text message from husband.

Noon: Get text message from husband. They’re still alive.

2 p.m., 3:13 p.m., 4:28 p.m.: Check phone to make sure haven’t missed a message.

5:30 p.m.: Get text message from husband. They’ve reached target destination for the night.

6 p.m.: Leaving work late because apparently I’m not properly prepared to take advantage of having the house to myself.

6:10 p.m. Another text message from husband. They’re driving on. Okay…will keep phone close by then.

6:50 p.m.: Arrive home. Dog starts barking his head off when I pull into driveway. With no boys in the house all day and having watched them depart with suitcases, I’m sure he thought he had been forever abandoned. Take barking to be a good sign though – probably no lurking murderers inside. Go into house. Dog greets me like his long-lost and much-mourned mother, then promptly goes outside to his man cave under the deck. And doesn’t come back in. I guess he didn’t miss me that much.

7 p.m.: Dinner time – usually a time I dread because the thought of eating at this time of night turns my stomach. But, left to my own devices, have stopped at grocery store on way home to stock up on stuff to make a big salad. Make big salad and relish the idea that no one else is here to steal all my baby corn.

8 p.m.: Another message from husband. They’re still driving. He must have gone insane.

8:30 p.m.: It’s getting dark – better walk the dog. Entice him in from his man cave and head out. Pass a cul-de-sac with a bunch of noisy kids enjoying the last of the evening’s light. Consider asking them to come and sleep on my living room floor so I’m not in the house alone overnight. Pass the house where small, yippy dog goes positively berserk every time we walk past. Do not consider asking berserk dog to sleep on living room floor.

8:45 p.m.: Dog is a little overexcited about this walk. His enthusiastic pulling on the leash causes fierce Braxton Hicks, but I figure at least his heavy breathing will scare away any potential stalkers and prevent me from having to attempt to waddle quickly down the street.

9:22 p.m.: Have retired upstairs to bed. Dog is standing by front door barking. I don’t have enough Xanax for this. (I don’t have any at all, actually. And I’ve never taken Xanax. But still…)

9:42 p.m.: Husband texts. They’ve made it to the ferry and will be at my parents’ tonight. Glad, at least, that I don’t have to worry about them driving tomorrow.

12:20 a.m.: Dog is barking again. This is going to be a long night.

1 a.m.: Husband texts again to say they caught last ferry and have arrived. Text back. He texts again to tell me I’m supposed to be sleeping. Stupid husband – how am I supposed to sleep with dog barking and phone beeping?

1:10 a.m.: Try anyway.

Day 2

7 a.m.: Haven’t slept much. Hit snooze button for an hour straight.

9 a.m.: Haul myself into work. Decide I’m being silly and resolve to suck it up tonight and just sleep.

6 p.m.: Arrive home from work. Dog doesn’t bark. Briefly wonder if this means he’s been silenced by an intruder; realize that’s unlikely. When I open the door and call him he gets slowly up from a chair in the living room where he’s been napping. Dumb dog.

9 p.m.: Summoning all rational thought, head to bed.

Day 3

7 a.m.: Success! Slept most of the night (aside from getting up to pee – damn pregnancy).

9 a.m.: Rear-ended on way to work. Great, that’s just what I need – to be worrying about a car accident while eight months pregnant.

9:33 a.m.: Continue on to work. Why is it that every car seems to be tailing too close?! Stupid drivers.

9:35 a.m.: Realize it’s probably not prudent to be driving on the freeway while constantly watching rearview mirror.

10:30 a.m.: At work. Talk to midwife, who assures me that minor fender bender means baby should be fine. Spend time trying to reassure anxious husband and mother.

5:37 p.m.: Leaving work. What is up with people coming up behind me and changing lanes quickly at the last minute? Life flashes before my eyes repeatedly during drive home. Really, really don’t need this.

9 p.m.: Go to bed early and try to reset. Thank god tomorrow’s Friday!

Day 4

10:15 p.m.: A bit of a wacky day at work. Happily ensconced in bed watching Downton Abbey for the 14th time. (Matthew is so yummy.)

Day 5

11 a.m.: Did well again last night – no ridiculous midnight panic attacks. See? I’ve got this. And I could get used to sleeping in… Too bad they’re coming home tomorrow.

10 p.m.: Quite a nice Saturday. Could definitely get used to this, especially because I’m not freaking out at every little noise anymore.

11:26 p.m.: What was that noise?!

1:14 a.m.: And that noise – what was that?!

2 a.m.: Dammit. Now I’m just awake. And hungry. But don’t want to go downstairs in the dark.

2:20 a.m.: After 20 minutes of agonizing, decide to go down and get some cereal already. Dog lying by back door. Let dog out, get cereal, let dog back in. Go back upstairs to bed. Dog follows.

2:49 a.m.: Enjoy having dog sleep with me, but kind of prefer him to be downstairs so he can be first line of defence against intruders. Besides, he’s taking up all the space on the bed.

3:01 a.m.: Oh well. Better try to sleep.

3:06 a.m.: Effing heartburn.

Day 5

10 a.m.: Wake up. Have survived five nights in house by myself.

11:13 a.m.: It’s too quiet around here. Glad boys are going to be home this afternoon.

Noon: Text from husband. They’re about three hours away.

12:01 p.m.: Oh god, am about to lose all this lovely peace and quiet.

12:02 p.m.: Accept ridiculousness of it all and take self out for ice cream.

Home Alone

Rich took Connor camping last weekend. I was supposed to go but after a previous one-nighter camping trip that was, shall we say, less than successful, I decided to give this trip a miss. This wasn’t a terribly difficult decision given the pregnant/sleeping outdoors combination, never mind the appeal of a house to myself for a couple of days, but there was one downside.

I’m not so good at being home alone. [Read more…]